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Polish ruling party plans social-media ban for children under 15

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review

Posted on February 27, 2026

2 min read

· Last updated: April 2, 2026

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By Barbara Erling WARSAW, Feb 27 (Reuters) - The largest party in Poland's coalition government is preparing legislation that would bar children under 15 from using social media, opening the door to a

Poland’s ruling party plans social media ban for children under 15

By Barbara Erling

Proposed legislation to restrict under-15 access to social media

Overview of the Reuters report

WARSAW, Feb 27 (Reuters) - The largest party in Poland's coalition government is preparing legislation that would bar children under 15 from using social media, opening the door to a potential clash with major U.S. tech firms.

Penalties and age verification requirements

Education Minister Barbara Nowacka on Friday outlined plans to fine social media companies up to 6% of their turnover if their services remain accessible to under‑15s and would require platforms to verify users' ages.

Mental health rationale and public awareness

"We need to limit access to social media for children under 15. At the same time, we need to work on mental health and raise awareness among children, parents, and the entire Polish society about the dangers of social media," Nowacka told a press conference.

Timeline and coalition support questions

Nowacka had described the plan in an interview with Bloomberg News published earlier on Friday, adding that the law could take effect by early 2027. It was not clear if the rest of the ruling coalition would support it, however.

Potential conflict with U.S. tech firms

The initiative could put Warsaw at odds with U.S. tech firms such as Meta, and Elon Musk's X, some of which have pushed back against restrictions following Australia's ban last year.

Government stance on child safety

"We're not looking at Big Tech's passport. We're looking at the safety of Polish children, and it's absolutely obvious that no one has the right to pose a threat to the future, development, and safety of children and young people," Nowacka told Reuters.

International context and similar moves

United Kingdom and Australia references

The British government said in January it was considering restrictions to protect children online, after Australia implemented similar laws in December.

Other European governments exploring restrictions

Several other European governments including Denmark, Greece, France and Spain have explored similar restrictions amid claims that social-media services are harmful or addictive for minors.

(Reporting by Barbara Erling in Warsaw, Rajveer Singh Pardesi in Bengaluru: editing by Neil Fullick and Philippa Fletcher)

Key Takeaways

  • Poland is moving from content-level protections toward an account-access age gate, with mandatory age verification and significant penalties—raising the likelihood of legal and political pushback from U.S. platforms operating across the EU. (esafety.gov.au)
  • Australia provides the closest recent precedent: its restrictions require platforms to take “reasonable steps” to prevent under-16s from holding accounts, backed by large fines and compliance reporting expectations—an enforcement model Warsaw may study or adapt. (esafety.gov.au)
  • Poland’s proposal lands amid accelerating European debate: the UK is explicitly weighing tougher social-media limits for minors (alongside existing age-assurance and child-safety requirements), signalling increasing regulatory momentum beyond Poland. (gov.uk)

References

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Poland proposing for children under 15 and social media?
The largest party in Poland’s coalition government is preparing legislation to bar children under 15 from using social media.
What penalties could social media companies face under the plan?
Education Minister Barbara Nowacka said platforms could be fined up to 6% of their turnover if their services remain accessible to under-15s.
Would the proposed law require age verification?
Yes. The plan would require platforms to verify users’ ages.
When could the Polish social media ban take effect?
Nowacka said in an interview that the law could take effect by early 2027.
Which companies and countries are referenced in relation to similar restrictions?
The initiative could put Warsaw at odds with U.S. tech firms such as Meta and Elon Musk’s X. The article also notes Australia’s ban and that the UK is considering restrictions, while Denmark, Greece, France and Spain have explored similar measures.

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